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I always thought that Juliet's famous soliloquy is more about words than their actual relationship or her deepest thoughts. She muses about "a rose by any name smells as sweet". She questions "what's, in a name?" and of course what it means to be a Montague. There is little character development about Juliet herself or even Romeo. There is allot of metaphor and play with words and meaning. Romeo on the other hand is all about his new obsession with Juliet. His words place her on a pedestal and really lack any rational ideas about the nature of love instead fixated on his own infatuation with a beauty that seems unattainable.

Answered by
lily b #348885
on 5/20/2014 7:24 PM

so im doing an essay what can i put for the contrast the tone of Romeo and Juliet soliloquies in act 2 with two text support